United Nations

UN adopts COVID-19 response resolution; US votes against it

Agence France-Presse

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UN adopts COVID-19 response resolution; US votes against it

(FILES) In this file photo the United Nations logo is seen at the United Nations Headquarters in New York on September 24, 2019. - The UN Security Council on September 10, 2020 called on all member states to do more to protect schools from outside violence, in a unanimous statement sponsored by Niger and Belgium. The 15 members say schools should be "spaces free from all forms of violence," lamenting an uptick in attacks on schools in recent years, leading to an "alarming number of children denied access to quality education."According to the United Nations, from 2015 to 2019, about 11,000 armed attacks targeting education in some way took place worldwide. (Photo by Angela Weiss / AFP)

Angela Weiss / AFP

Even with the US not supporting it, an overwhelming majority of 169 countries adopt a UN resolution for a 'comprehensive and coordinated response' to the COVID-19 pandemic

The United States was supported only by Israel Friday, September 11, in a vote against a UN resolution for a “comprehensive and coordinated response” to the COVID-19 pandemic, a text that included recognition of the WHO’s leadership role.

The measure, which has been negotiated since May, was adopted by an overwhelming majority of 169 countries out of 193, with Ukraine and Hungary abstaining.

The text, called an omnibus resolution because it covers multiple aspects of the pandemic, “acknowledges the key leadership role of WHO and the fundamental role of the United Nations system in catalyzing and coordinating the comprehensive global response to the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The United States withdrew from the WHO this spring, accusing the body of mismanaging the coronavirus pandemic and delaying launch of a global alert.

The text “calls for intensified international cooperation and solidarity to contain, mitigate and overcome the pandemic and its consequences.”

And it supports UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ call in March for a ceasefire between countries in order to better facilitate the fight against the pandemic – a request that has been little followed.

The text additionally calls for “the urgent removal of unjustified obstacles,” meaning sanctions, in order to create better access to products used in combatting the virus.

It requests nations to maintain food and agricultural supply chains and encourages synching economic recovery strategies to promote sustainable development and combat climate change.

Ahead of the vote, the United States unsuccessfully attempted to remove a paragraph on protecting women in the area of sexual and reproductive health, over objections about abortion.

Libya and Iraq also voted for the paragraph’s removal. However more than 120 countries voted to keep it and 25 countries abstained. – Rappler.com

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